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S21: The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine (2004)
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Reviews Counted:30
Fresh:29
Rotten:1
Average Rating:7.7/10
Rated: Not Rated
Genre: Education/General Interest
Theatrical Release:May 19, 2004 Limited
Synopsis: Attempting to make peace between Cambodian torture survivors and the Khmer Rouge soldiers who brutalized them, the documentary S21: THE KHMER ROUGE KILLING MACHINE takes a close-up look at the the... Attempting to make peace between Cambodian torture survivors and the Khmer Rouge soldiers who brutalized them, the documentary S21: THE KHMER ROUGE KILLING MACHINE takes a close-up look at the the prison camps where this disturbing chapter of history took place in the mid-1970s. Using firsthand accounts from both victims and soldiers, the film is set in the now-deserted S21 detention center. While the victims are barely able to speak about their experiences without being brought to tears, the soldiers seem to snap into a robotic and emotionless zone when re-enacting their daily duties (which included beating and murdering innocent people). Using photos of the nearly 17,000 people who were killed by the Khmer Rouge at S21 between '75 and '77, as well as documentation of the "confessions" of the victims, it becomes starkly clear that neither the victims nor the soldiers had any idea why this happened. The soldiers were given orders and they followed them. The victims were brutally tortured until they made up stories of treason and espionage. A shocking and revealing look at a terrifying event, director Rithy Panh--who endured four years in a Khmer Rouge labor camp--has made a starkly memorable statement with this grueling film. [More]
Director: Rithy Panh
Director: Rithy Panh
Producer: Caty Couteau
Studio: First Run Features
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Reviews for S21: The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine
It's not the kind of movie you would want to see more than once, but it opens your eyes to another period in history when man shows his capacity for inhumanity.
...an imperfectly realized yet nevertheless important look at the depths to which humanity can sink all too easily.
A haunting look at the historical amnesia that envelops countries or regimes after officially sanctioned barbarism.
There's no shortage of existing docus on the subject, and Panh's doesn't bring either a fresh enough angle or enough new material to the table to justify its length.
Panh is a great theorist, successfully evoking life and death at a forced labor camp with as little as a pan across a painting.
It is not a film—which unflinchingly captures a still festering wound on humanity—you are likely to forget.
In this affecting and effective documentary, a placid artist returns to the place where he was tortured by the Khmer Rouge to confront the men who worked as guards.
Moves very slowly and tends to be repetitive, but it has a simmering intensity beneath its deceptively placid surface...quietly devastating.
A chilling documentary that compels us to consider the terrible things human beings can do to one another because of fear, ideology, or just following orders.
Understated and unforgettable; in its modest way, this movie is as horrific an exposure to evil as Lanzmann's Shoah.
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